Adults

  • This is a drop-in time for you to come with your tech questions.

    Please come with your device(s) and all necessary
    passwords. We can take this time to make sure you are
    set up properly to take advantage of all the library has
    to offer, or to help you get up and running with your
    email program, social media, and the like.
    If we can’t help you, we’ll find an answer or point you in
    the direction of finding it yourself. We hope you’ll take
    advantage of this new service. If the time is not right for
    you, just let us know and we can set up an appointment.
    Tech Tuesdays @ PRML - 10:30-11:30 am (drop in help)
    Tech Thursday @ ML - 3-4: 30 pm (drop in help)

    May 28, 10:30am - Philip Read Memorial Library
  • Tuesdays at 4:30 pm.

    All levels welcome.

     

    What is cribbage?

    Cribbage, or crib, is a card game, traditionally for two players, that involves playing and grouping cards in combinations which gain points. It can be adapted for three or four players.[1]

    Cribbage has several distinctive features: the cribbage board used for score-keeping; the crib, box, or kitty (in parts of Canada and New England) two distinct scoring stages; and a unique scoring system, including points for groups of cards that total 15. It has been characterized as "Britain's national card game" and the only one legally playable in licensed pubs and clubs without requiring local authority permission.[2]

    The game has relatively few rules yet many subtleties, which accounts for its ongoing appeal and popularity. Tactical play varies, depending on which cards one's opponent has played, how many cards in the remaining pack will help the hand one holds, and what one's position on the board is. A game may be decided by a single point, and the edge often goes to an experienced player who utilizes strategy, including calculating odds and making decisions based on the relative positions of players on the board.

    Both cribbage and its close relative costly colours are descended from the old English card game of noddy. Cribbage added the distinctive feature of a crib and changed the scoring system for points, whereas costly colours added more combinations but retained the original noddy scoring scheme.

     

     

    May 28, 04:30pm - Meriden Library
  • Meriden Library

    Wednesdays 10-11 am

    May 29, 10:00am - Meriden Library
  • Drop-in board games - 2 pm at the Meriden Library

    May 30, 02:00pm - Meriden Library
  • This is a drop-in time for you to come with your tech questions.

    Please come with your device(s) and all necessary
    passwords. We can take this time to make sure you are
    set up properly to take advantage of all the library has
    to offer, or to help you get up and running with your
    email program, social media, and the like.
    If we can’t help you, we’ll find an answer or point you in
    the direction of finding it yourself. We hope you’ll take
    advantage of this new service. If the time is not right for
    you, just let us know and we can set up an appointment.
    Tech Tuesdays @ PRML - 10:30-11:30 am (drop in help)
    Tech Thursday @ ML - 3-4: 30 pm (drop in help)

    May 30, 03:00pm - Meriden Library
  • Agenda-April 1, 2024, Library, 6:30

    1. Approval of minutes - March 

    2. Treasurer Report

    3. Membership

    4. Programs-request by Jim

    5. Memorandum of Understanding--see revisions by the library trustees

    6. Request by library trustees-discussion re moving the book shed

    7. Rt. 12A clean-up--need volunteers for weeks of: one for April 22, two for June 17, August 19, October 14

    8. Other

    9. Next meeting: May 6


    Join Zoom Meeting

    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84096781704?pwd=a1BHMURJWU1GS1cyUURMdlNxMSt1Zz09

    Meeting ID: 840 9678 1704

    Passcode: 632979

    One tap mobile

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     Dial by your location

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    Jun 03, 06:03pm - Philip Read Memorial Library
  • Becoming Wolf: The Eastern Coyote in New England

    An eastern coyote is defined as much by its western coyote ancestry as by its DNA
    contribution from the Eastern wolf. “Our” coyotes vary physically and
    behaviorally from its smaller relative – while still carrying the incredible
    adaptability and canniness of Wile E. Coyote. This program takes a deep dive into
    the ecology and behavior of this creature, its indefatigability and how it is the
    human who must adapt to live with the ‘One Who Cannot Be Removed’.
    On the horizon, however, is a native carnivore which fled the northeast during
    wolf removal and now may be trying to return: The eastern wolf. A look-alike to
    the coyote, it has been killed mistakenly for its similarity of appearance to the
    coyote. We’ll talk about how the wolf and coyote might negotiate a truce in the
    northeast and how we might do the same.

    About 

    Christine Schadler (pronounced Shaydler)
    Chris’ interest in wild canids began in the 1970s as a volunteer at Wolf
    Park in Battleground, Indiana. This opportunity and others inspired an
    eventual Masters in Conservation Biology at Antioch University in
    Keene. Her thesis focused on the Natural Recovery of the Eastern
    Timber Wolf in Michigan. Chris lived in Michigan and Minnesota
    during the early 1980s where her research into the gray wolf continued
    and her speaking career began.
    Beginning in the early 1990s, Chris taught Forestry, Wolf Ecology and
    Environmental Conservation in the Natural Resources Department at
    UNH. She also instructed and mentored adult degree candidates in the
    UNH System at Granite State College.
    While wolf recovery was the focus of her early work, Chris’ attention
    shifted to the Eastern Coyote when she and her flock of sheep moved to
    New England. She is now the NH and VT Representative for Project
    Coyote, a national organization promoting coexistence with coyotes.
    Chris (with John Harrigan) co-founded the NH Wildlife Coalition which
    aims to defend predators and broaden public input into wildlife decision-
    making. She currently Chairs the Webster Conservation Commission
    and is a member of the Northeast Wolf Recovery Alliance.

    Chris taught Wolf Ecology, Conservation and Dendrology at UNH.
    Since the 1970s, coexisting with the eastern coyote was put into practice
    on her sheep farms where no lethal measures and no predation occurred,
    ever. She is the NH & VT Rep for Project Coyote and Co-Founder of
    the NH Wildlife Coalition, which advocates for better conservation for
    predators.

    Chris holds a Masters in Conservation Biology and offers 40 years of
    research and specialization in wild canids, particularly the Eastern Wolf
    and the Eastern Coyote. Now retired from teaching Conservation,
    Dendrology and Wolf Ecology at UNH and Conservation at Granite
    State College, she provides education and presentations throughout New
    England.

    Jun 26, 06:30pm - Philip Read Memorial Library
  • Agenda-April 1, 2024, Library, 6:30

    1. Approval of minutes - March 

    2. Treasurer Report

    3. Membership

    4. Programs-request by Jim

    5. Memorandum of Understanding--see revisions by the library trustees

    6. Request by library trustees-discussion re moving the book shed

    7. Rt. 12A clean-up--need volunteers for weeks of: one for April 22, two for June 17, August 19, October 14

    8. Other

    9. Next meeting: May 6


    Join Zoom Meeting

    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84096781704?pwd=a1BHMURJWU1GS1cyUURMdlNxMSt1Zz09

    Meeting ID: 840 9678 1704

    Passcode: 632979

    One tap mobile

    +13017158592,,84096781704#,,,,*632979# US (Washington DC)

    +13052241968,,84096781704#,,,,*632979# US

     Dial by your location

    • +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)

    • +1 305 224 1968 US

    • +1 309 205 3325 US

    • +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)

    • +1 646 931 3860 US

    • +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)


     

    Aug 05, 06:30pm - Philip Read Memorial Library
  • Agenda-April 1, 2024, Library, 6:30

    1. Approval of minutes - March 

    2. Treasurer Report

    3. Membership

    4. Programs-request by Jim

    5. Memorandum of Understanding--see revisions by the library trustees

    6. Request by library trustees-discussion re moving the book shed

    7. Rt. 12A clean-up--need volunteers for weeks of: one for April 22, two for June 17, August 19, October 14

    8. Other

    9. Next meeting: May 6


    Join Zoom Meeting

    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84096781704?pwd=a1BHMURJWU1GS1cyUURMdlNxMSt1Zz09

    Meeting ID: 840 9678 1704

    Passcode: 632979

    One tap mobile

    +13017158592,,84096781704#,,,,*632979# US (Washington DC)

    +13052241968,,84096781704#,,,,*632979# US

     Dial by your location

    • +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)

    • +1 305 224 1968 US

    • +1 309 205 3325 US

    • +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)

    • +1 646 931 3860 US

    • +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)


     

    Oct 07, 06:30pm - Philip Read Memorial Library
  • Agenda-April 1, 2024, Library, 6:30

    1. Approval of minutes - March 

    2. Treasurer Report

    3. Membership

    4. Programs-request by Jim

    5. Memorandum of Understanding--see revisions by the library trustees

    6. Request by library trustees-discussion re moving the book shed

    7. Rt. 12A clean-up--need volunteers for weeks of: one for April 22, two for June 17, August 19, October 14

    8. Other

    9. Next meeting: May 6


    Join Zoom Meeting

    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84096781704?pwd=a1BHMURJWU1GS1cyUURMdlNxMSt1Zz09

    Meeting ID: 840 9678 1704

    Passcode: 632979

    One tap mobile

    +13017158592,,84096781704#,,,,*632979# US (Washington DC)

    +13052241968,,84096781704#,,,,*632979# US

     Dial by your location

    • +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)

    • +1 305 224 1968 US

    • +1 309 205 3325 US

    • +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)

    • +1 646 931 3860 US

    • +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)


     

    Nov 04, 06:30pm - Philip Read Memorial Library